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World War II at Home

World War II at Home. The Shift to Wartime Production. Overview. Selling weapons to the Allies and buying weapons for ourselves will bring our economy out of the Depression. Ultimately, success depends upon our ability to produce. Mobilizing the Economy for War. Government Action

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World War II at Home

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  1. World War II at Home

  2. The Shift to Wartime Production

  3. Overview Selling weapons to the Allies and buying weapons for ourselves will bring our economy out of the Depression. Ultimately, success depends upon our ability to produce

  4. Mobilizing the Economy for War • Government Action • Office of Price Administration (OPA) • Kept prices from going up • Oversaw Rationing • War Production Board • Oversaw conversion of peacetime industries to wartime industry.

  5. Industrial Conversion • Shirt Factories--mosquito netting. • Typewriter plants--machine guns • Auto factories--bombers (cars were rationed) • Ford built the Willow run Plant--produced 340 planes / month on a mile long assembly line. • Henry J. Kaiser • Revolutionized ship building by building sections of the ship in different parts of the shipyard. • Liberty Ships in 1941 took 150 days to build. Kaiser built them in 4.

  6. Coca Cola • Promised “We will see that every man in uniform gets a bottle of Coca Cola for 5¢ • Sold over 5 million • The “Great Arsenal of Democracy” • By mid 1945 the US had made: • 300k planes • 80K landing craft • 100K Tanks and Armored Cars • 5,600 Merchant ships • 6 million rifles, carbines and machine guns. • 41 billion rounds of ammunition

  7. Douglas Aircraft B-18

  8. Willow Run Plant (2.5 M sq ft.)

  9. Tank Production

  10. Liberty Ship

  11. Henry J. Kaiser

  12. SS Robert E. PearyCompleted in 4 days

  13. Financing the War 1939-1945 • 1939 Spending was $9.4 billion; 1945 $95.2 billion • GNP more than doubled • 41% of the war has financed by higher taxes • The remainder was borrowed from banks, private investors and the public. • Deficit spending boosted the economy, but the accumulated debt caused problems later on.

  14. Daily Life on the Home Front

  15. Pop Culture • Books and Movies • The paperback book market skyrocketed • 60% of Americans went to the movies every week. • Baseball • 4K of the 5,700 players were in the war. • Women’ professional ball • Organized by Phillip Wrigley • All American Girls Softball League / Baseball

  16. Popular Music • “Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition • “White Christmas” Bing Crosby

  17. Shortages and Controls • Unavailable Goods • Metal for zippers made guns • Rubber for girdles made tires • Nylon was used for parachutes not stockings

  18. Rationed Goods • Sugar was scarce b/c of the fall of the Philippines • Rationing of food and clothes was based on a point system issued in ration books. Once points were used, could not buy more • Gas was rationed

  19. Enlisting Public Support • Office of War Mobilization • Purpose--get the public to support the war in every way • Examples • Victory Gardens • by 1943 produced 1/3 of fresh vegetables in the US • Air Raid blackouts on the coasts • VA--volunteers raised sunken ships in the James River for parts and scrap.

  20. Metal Drives • Rubber drives • Saved kitchen grease to collect glycerin to make powder for bullets • Slogans • “Play your Part” • “Conserve and Collect” • “Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

  21. Women and the War“Rosie the Riveter”

  22. Changes for Women • The government actively recruited women for the workforce. • Married women entered the work force and for the 1st time outnumbered single women. • At one point women made up 35% of the workforce.

  23. Benefits for Women • More money to pay off debts incurred during the depression. • Had challenging and interesting work opportunities. • Percentage of African American women working went from 6.8% to 18 %.

  24. Problems • Hostile reactions from other workers. • Less pay than men for the same job. • Worried about leaving children at home.

  25. After the War • Industry and government encouraged women to leave their public jobs. • Were encouraged to focus on homemaking.

  26. The Struggle for Justice at Home

  27. Discrimination against African Americans • Economic Discrimination • 1941-- 1/5 were unemployed • Limited housing available • Limited opportunities to advance in the workplace • The Jim Crow System remained strong in the South.

  28. Military • Whites and African Americans were strictly segregated. • African Americans pushed the “Double V” campaign

  29. A. Phillip Randolph • Pushed for Black rights in the labor movement • Helped the “Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters” railway union gain successes.

  30. Mexicans • Bracero Program • Agreement b/w the US and Mexico • >200K workers allowed to enter the US and work on farms

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